An investigation on domain specific social time preference rates in Singapore

Social discount rates (SDR) is the rate at which society is willing to forgo a unit of current consumption for future consumption. The social time preference rate approach to eliciting SDR has been adopted by many countries. Yet, there is limited research on SDR in Singapore. This paper seeks to add...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Chua, Jolene Yi Lin, Chong, Sheryl Hui Ping, Choy, Marcus Guang Lin
Other Authors: Euston Quah
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/139207
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-139207
record_format dspace
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1392072020-05-18T03:54:48Z An investigation on domain specific social time preference rates in Singapore Chua, Jolene Yi Lin Chong, Sheryl Hui Ping Choy, Marcus Guang Lin Euston Quah School of Social Sciences ecsquahe@ntu.edu.sg Social sciences::Economic theory Social sciences::Economic development::Singapore Social discount rates (SDR) is the rate at which society is willing to forgo a unit of current consumption for future consumption. The social time preference rate approach to eliciting SDR has been adopted by many countries. Yet, there is limited research on SDR in Singapore. This paper seeks to address this gap by eliciting social time preference rates (STPR) in Singapore in three domains: environment, health and money by conducting Discrete Choice Experiments with 284 respondents. It is observed that STPR for money is consistently higher than that in the health domain. STPR for the environmental domain could not be obtained due to insignificant estimates. The STPR elicited are as follows: money (2 year: 14.2%, 4 year: 19.1%, 6 year: 18.0%); health (2 year: 9.2%, 4 year: 14.4%, 6 year: 13.4%). Generally, results fall within the range of stated preference STPR elicited in past literature. However, patterns exhibited cannot be explained by conventional discounting models. The initial increase in impatience amongst respondents followed by patience over time demonstrates that Singaporeans may be more attuned towards short term policies and are willing to wait for long term benefits. Personal characteristic and domain specific knowledge, attitude and practices framework (KAP) questions are further interacted with delay and improvements to explore their influence on STPR. Bachelor of Arts in Economics 2020-05-18T03:54:48Z 2020-05-18T03:54:48Z 2020 Final Year Project (FYP) https://hdl.handle.net/10356/139207 en HE_1AY1920_22 application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Economic theory
Social sciences::Economic development::Singapore
spellingShingle Social sciences::Economic theory
Social sciences::Economic development::Singapore
Chua, Jolene Yi Lin
Chong, Sheryl Hui Ping
Choy, Marcus Guang Lin
An investigation on domain specific social time preference rates in Singapore
description Social discount rates (SDR) is the rate at which society is willing to forgo a unit of current consumption for future consumption. The social time preference rate approach to eliciting SDR has been adopted by many countries. Yet, there is limited research on SDR in Singapore. This paper seeks to address this gap by eliciting social time preference rates (STPR) in Singapore in three domains: environment, health and money by conducting Discrete Choice Experiments with 284 respondents. It is observed that STPR for money is consistently higher than that in the health domain. STPR for the environmental domain could not be obtained due to insignificant estimates. The STPR elicited are as follows: money (2 year: 14.2%, 4 year: 19.1%, 6 year: 18.0%); health (2 year: 9.2%, 4 year: 14.4%, 6 year: 13.4%). Generally, results fall within the range of stated preference STPR elicited in past literature. However, patterns exhibited cannot be explained by conventional discounting models. The initial increase in impatience amongst respondents followed by patience over time demonstrates that Singaporeans may be more attuned towards short term policies and are willing to wait for long term benefits. Personal characteristic and domain specific knowledge, attitude and practices framework (KAP) questions are further interacted with delay and improvements to explore their influence on STPR.
author2 Euston Quah
author_facet Euston Quah
Chua, Jolene Yi Lin
Chong, Sheryl Hui Ping
Choy, Marcus Guang Lin
format Final Year Project
author Chua, Jolene Yi Lin
Chong, Sheryl Hui Ping
Choy, Marcus Guang Lin
author_sort Chua, Jolene Yi Lin
title An investigation on domain specific social time preference rates in Singapore
title_short An investigation on domain specific social time preference rates in Singapore
title_full An investigation on domain specific social time preference rates in Singapore
title_fullStr An investigation on domain specific social time preference rates in Singapore
title_full_unstemmed An investigation on domain specific social time preference rates in Singapore
title_sort investigation on domain specific social time preference rates in singapore
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/139207
_version_ 1681056995430367232